Jack of Fables: The (Nearly) Great Escape
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Average customer review:Product Description
From the pages of "Fables", the hugely imaginative story of a group of fairy tale characters exiled from their mythical homelands and forced into a secret existence in modern-day America, comes the tale of Jack - of "...and the Beanstalk" fame! Last seen hitchhiking from Hollywood after releasing a trilogy of films about his fairytale adventures - which made him an international superstar but caused him to be exiled from the Fable community - Jack heads into the heartland of America. What he will discover there is the stuff of fairy tales! "Fables" creator Bill Willingham, Matthew Sturges (Midwinter) and penciller Tony Akins (Hellblazer: Papa Midnite) present an all-new adventure!
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #56062 in Books
- Published on: 2007-04-27
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 128 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"* "Funny and engaging; original, too." - Time Out * "Great fun." - Booklist * "Instantly compelling." - Cinescape.com * "Looks as good as it reads." - Comics Buyer's Guide * "Tosses traditional fairy tales down the rabbit hole." - Wizard"
About the Author
Bill Willingham is a writer and artist whose work includes Coventry and The Sandman Presents. He is currently writer/artist of Shadowpact. Matthew Sturges' work includes the novel Midwinter and anthologies Live Without A Net and Revolution SF. Jack of Fables is his first comics series. Tony Akins' work has appeared in a variety of comics and graphic novels including Fables, Elementals, GI Joe, Hellblazer: Papa Midnite and Star Wars.
Customer Reviews
listen up mundys!
This is a spin off series from the popular comic fables, which tells the story of fairy tale characters living in new york, in exile from their homeworlds which have been overrun by armies led by a mysterious adversary. Every character from these other worlds is called a fable, whilst the people of this world are mundanes, or mundys for short.
A regular character in fables, jack is every single jack from fairy tales. A con artist and trickster always on the lookout for easy money, he left fables a while through that series, leaving new york to strike out on his own, and has been spun off into his own solo series.
This collects the first five issues of it. In this story jack is captured by mister revise, a very powerful man who tracks down fables and keeps them imprisoned in order to make the world forget about them. Because the less well known a fable is, the less power and strength they have. Jack, as a result of several movies about him, is currently very powerful and nigh on indestructible.
Stuck in golden boughs, the community where revise keeps captured fables prisoner, is jack doomed to be forgotten? Or will he become the first ever fable to make a successful breakout?
What do you think!?
Jack is a wonderfully entertaining character, totally amoral and completely in love with himself, and that makes him all the more fun. The story is a highly entertaining read, not least because it breaks the fourth wall on many occasions, jack often talking directly to the reader.
A highly entertaining start to the series and well worth reading
Jack is Back
After the comparatively benign and very romantic Wolves, this spin-off from Fables features the incorrigible Jack plus that decidedly nasty character 'Goldilocks', plus what qualifies as an 'evil conspiracy'--against the folks we have come to like and Fabletown as a whole-- giving this set of tales a decidedly nasty character. I love nasty conspiracies. Won't tell you how this one ends, but for one thing: it ain't over until it's over.
I mean, I knew Goldy wasn't killed by Snow White, despite the axe buried deeply in her skull, blood sloshing all over the place, plus the truck that collected her on the windshield and the plunge into the river. Goldilocks is hard to kill, because...
Well, I'm sure Bill Willingham has read Roald Dahl's Revolting Rhymes and had Dahl's delinquent B&E girl in mind when he characterized Fables's Goldilocks. Because she is just about what you'd expect from the more grown-up young lady described by Roald Dahl as "Goldilocks, that little toad, That nosey thieving little louse, [who] Comes sneaking in your empty house...". But, of course, a 'Fable' survives partially on its popularity with the common folk, and Goldilocks is, after all, very popular.
Goldi was the one who shot Snow White in the head, but fortunately the latter also is very popular, and therefore survived for long enough to have Bigby Wolf's odd little cubs. Here we have one of the great antitheses of these stories. On one side the selfish, murderous Goldie, who led a bloody rebellion at 'The Farm', and turned out to be the worst of self-serving cynical ideological agitators in the stories. On the other a less-than angelic tough-chick Snow White, the right hand and executive mayor of 'Fabletown', who ran the show for centuries, before this thing with the cubs happened.
A similar contrast exists between Jack and Bigby Wolf. Jack is the charming cad, whose only interest is himself. Period. He isn't quite as nasty as the late Bluebeard, but take away the wife-killing fetish of the latter, the two are damn close. Whatever Jack does is for Jack's benefit. Egomania as a driving motive for action, ethics and everything else is fascinating. It isn't 'evil' per se--or maybe it is more evil than the 'evil' that's recognizable as such. I'm still pondering that one.
Contrast him to Bigby Wolf, a man who spent most of his life as a giant wolf--and still spends the occasional stretches of quality-time in that condition. At one time he was a creature of simple appetites, which went to killing whatever came his way. His father was the emotionally-distant 'North Wind', whom Bigby once describes as 'truly evil'. Bigby's animal nature was transformed and he was redeemed into becoming a human being through the intervention of Snow White, whose scent he could never forget since the first time he caught a whiff of her. Ever since then his life has been, in one way or the other, about her. Redemption by love and all that--ultimately for both of them, because Snow has her issues, too; all of which are called 'Prince Charming' or connected to that particular cad.
No such redemption for Jack, who is a true psychopath and therefore unredeemable. Same goes for Goldilocks, and so the story of Jack of Fables and the conspiracy plays out. As usual, cool stuff; this one on the nasty side.




